McCastlain v. Oklahoma Gas & Electric Co.

420 S.W.2d 893, 243 Ark. 506
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 20, 1967
Docket5-4292
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 420 S.W.2d 893 (McCastlain v. Oklahoma Gas & Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCastlain v. Oklahoma Gas & Electric Co., 420 S.W.2d 893, 243 Ark. 506 (Ark. 1967).

Opinion

John A. Fogleman, Justice.

Appellant made an adjusted assessment against appellee Oklahoma Gas & Electric Company under the Arkansas Compensating Tax Act on the use of certain items claimed to be exempt by the electric company. After paying the tax under protest and exhausting administrative remedies, the company brought suit against appellant seeking to recover the tax with interest. Southwestern Power Company was permitted to intervene, but has actually only asked that Oklahoma Gas & Electric Company have the relief it seeks. Since Southwestern has actually filled the role of amicus curiae, we will refer to Oklahoma Gas & Electric Company as the appellee.

The adjusted tax and penalty in the sum of $21,74-3.29 were assessed upon some 365 items. Protest was made on items on which the assessment amounted to $21,126.27. These items fall roughly into three categories :

1. Steel towers, wooden poles, crossarms, supports, insulators and other items supporting the wires over which electric current is transmitted and distributed.
2. Items constituting substations.
3. Items used for street and area lighting purposes.

Exemption of these items is claimed under § 6 of Act 487 of 1949 [Ark. Stat. Ann. § 84-3106 (G-) (Supp. 1965),] the pertinent provision of which is as follows:

“Public Electric Power Companies. Tangible personal property, consisting of electric power generating machinery, transformers, control boards, substation equipment, lines, meters, and all other accessory equipment and devices used directly in and connected to and becoming a part of the primary electric power generating and distribution system is declared to be a public transmission facility and exempt from the tax imposed herein. Buildings, dams, shops, tools, maintenance equipment, office machines and supplies, automotive equipment, and all other materials of whatever kind or character incidental to such primary generating transmission facility are not included or classified as exempt.”

The trial court granted judgment in favor of appellee on all items involved in the protest. From that judgment appellant brings this appeal, citing the following points for reversal:

I. Exemptions from taxation are never presumed, and to doubt is to deny an exemption.
II. Ark. Stats., § 84-3106 (G-), paragraph 3 exempts from the Arkansas Compensatng (Use) Tax a certain class of tangible personal property which is both specific and limited in its composition.
III. The Legislature further limited this' exemption by providing four rules or guide lines by which the particular item seeking exemptions must abide before the exemption may be granted.

We find it unnecessary to deal with the first point as we feel that the statute may be applied to the various items in question without reasonable doubt, making resort to presumptions inappropriate. As to the other points, we will deal with them as related to the various items rather than discuss the points separately.

It is the contention of appellant that the word “lines” as used in the exemption statute should be construed to mean “wires” only and that none of the materials utilized for the support of these wires is exempt. On the other hand, appellee contends that this exemption is broad enough to cover transformers, substations, street lighting equipment, and virtually all of the questioned items. Appellant’s position is that the popular definition of the word should control, while appellee contends that the technical definition followed in the industry should govern. Appellee bases its contention upon the rule that commercial, trade or professional terms used in a statute dealing with the trade, business or profession are construed in the sense in Avhich such terms are generally understood in that trade, business or profession* even though such meaning may differ from the common, ordinary meaning. As to the items involved, we would come to the same conclusion without regard to the definition used. We base our findings on what appears to us to be the clear legislative intent.

The word “electric” preceding the specification of items of tangible personal property in the first sentence of the applicable subsection quite obviously modifies each of the items specified; i. e., the tangible personal property'includes electric transformers, electric substation equipment, electric lines and electric meters. In view of the commonly accepted concept of the meaning of the term “electric lines,” we do not see how the extremely narrow definition urged by appellant could have been intended by our General Assembly. Individuals in ordinary conversation refer to electric lines as the entire structure carrying electric current from the point of generation to the place of consumption. We speak of electric lines in the same sense as we do of railroad lines and telephone lines. On those subjects we do not think of railroad lines as consisting of the steel rails only, nor do we mean that telephone lines are composed of the wires only. Definitions of the word “lines’’ in our dictionaries reflect this usage. Among those given by Funk & Wagnalls New Standard Dictionary are: “The roadbed of a railroad” [Emphasis added]; . . . “The system of wires and poles comprising a telegraph or telephone connection between two points, as the Western Union lines were all down.”

Webster’s New International Dictionary, Third Edition, includes: “The principal circuits of an electric power system” ... “The track or roadbed of a railway.”

The General Assembly resorted to this usage in granting to electric power companies the right of eminent domain and the right to use public highways and streets when authorized the construction, operation and maintenance of “lines of wire, cables, poles, etc., necessary for the transmission of electricity.” Ark. Stat. Ann. § 35-301 (Repl. 1962). Rural electric cooperatives are given similar rights for their “lines.” § 77-1104 (11) (Repl. 1957).

The legislative intent is further indicated by reason of the fact that the General Assembly specifically mentioned items such as transformers, control boards, and meters. All of these terms identify the articles intended with certainty. It seems only logical that if the General Assembly had intended to exempt only wires, it would have used that word. Furthermore, no logical reason has been offered to explain why it would exempt all generating machinery, transformers, control boards, substation equipment, wires, meters, all other accessory equipment and devices used directly in and connected to and becoming a part of the primary electric power generating and distribution system and not exempt the steel towers, wooden poles, crossarms, insulators, guying equipment and other items supporting the wires and making it possible for electric current to be transmitted over them. "We agree with the chancellor that these items are exempt. We also agree that such items as signs and numerals required to be mounted on the structures are exempt.

Appellant also questions the exemption of the substations and the fences around them.

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Related

Hill v. Bank of Northeast Arkansas
572 S.W.2d 150 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1978)
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438 S.W.2d 33 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1969)
Laman v. McCord
432 S.W.2d 753 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
420 S.W.2d 893, 243 Ark. 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccastlain-v-oklahoma-gas-electric-co-ark-1967.